President Obama and his surrogates have not mentioned the 2009 stimulus much during the election, an omission that has not gone unnoticed among political reporters.

But another of Obama’s achievements from that year has also gotten little attention, either from Obama or his opponent: the Nobel Peace Prize.

In October of 2009, Obama was awarded the prize from the Norwegian Nobel Committee “for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples.”

Obama is one of only four U.S. presidents to be awarded the peace prize, but his accomplishments at the time were the thinnest. Republican Teddy Roosevelt won in 1905 for negotiating an end to the Russo-Japanese War; Democrat Woodrow Wilson, for promoting the League of Nations; and Democrat Jimmy Carter, for his post-presidential work.

It’s a sign that Obama doesn’t take the award too seriously that he has made little effort to capitalize on it in his re-election campaign. But it’s also a sign of the prize’s ongoing esteem that Romney has not used it as a criticism either.

The only major mention of it so far came from former “Saturday Night Live” comedian Jon Lovitz, who tweaked Obama in a July tweet saying “you didn’t earn that.”